Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, May 12, 1984, Image 153

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    DON'T
be
SLOW
Call Now To Place Your
CLASSIFIED AD
Ph! 717-374-3047 or 717-434-1144
With purchase of a new
6060 or 6080 2WD or FWD tractor!
It's one of the year’s best bargains! You get a free quick-attach
Model 460 loader, less bucket. Plus, a cash rebate. Use part of
the rebate to buy the bucket that meets your needs - do what
you want with money left over. Loader includes boom,
hydraulics, all attaching parts.
Both offers in lieu of special financing plans in effect for limited
time only. Stop in today!
Allis-Chalmers reserves the right to alter or withdraw programs at its option.
MARSHALL MACHINERY , POWER PRO EQUIP. CO.
Honesdale, Pa AG INO. Ed, INC. cwmcimit CJ. WONSIOLER BROS. M'lroyPa
717-729-7117 RismgSun, Md SHARTLESVIIIE Oley, Pa 717-667-6504
301-398-6132 FARMSERV. 215-987-6257
FARMER EQUIP. & Hamburg. Pa HUGHES BROS. INC.
SUPPLY INC. 215-488-1025 ominufrn iui> Westminster, Md
Airville, Pa. B.H.M. FARM EQUIP., L.H. BRUBAKER, INC. 301-848-6313
717-862-3967 INC? ~„u ul Lancaster, Pa
Annville, Pa JOHNW.SAUMS 717-397-5179
717-867-2211 t SONS INC. VJRNON E. STUPCO.
Flemington, N J
201 782-4242 CANYON IMPLEMENTS 301-663-3185
ROY H. BUCK, INC. !"
Eohrdts Pd Inw.
Bi R FARM EQ. INC. 717-859-2441 CJ. WONSIOLER BROS. %
Beavertown, PA Quakertown, Pa 717-724-2731
717-658-7024 215-536-7523
B. EQUIP., INC.
Waynesboro. Pa
717-762-3193
DOTTERER t KOLESAR,
INC.
Mill Hall, Pa
717-726-3471
mm'mm A b »^ n “LIS?
JSk. ALLIS-CHALMERS 8 “
Get a Model 450 loader,
less bucket, free when you
buy a 6140!
GRUMELLI
FARM SERVICE
Quarryville, Pa
717-786-7318
4-H
PETE K2^F P COCHRAN FARM
Carlisle, Pa. FDUIPHFNT
717-249-5338 SomefsTtPa
814-445-4189
WERTZ GARAGE, INC.
Lineboro, Md
301-374-2672
lf.pt *t w , fc >
Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 12,1984—D17
Tlje
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1 Business
JVewton Bair
How Much Change Can We Stand
What changes have you wit
nessed in the farm scene since you
started farming? Depending on
how long you’ve farmed, or how
long you have lived, you can chalk
up quite a list. And no matter how
long the list, it would not contain
every change that would be con
sidered significant by someone.
And did you ever notice just how
quickly farmers latch on to new
ideas? As a breed of rugged in
dividualists, we are never slow to
try out a new gimmick, especially
if it holds out a little hope of im
proving our lot. Of course, if it
doesn’t pay off, we soon drop it, but
it’s amazing how many crazy new
ideas of the last fifty years have
stayed around.
The mechanization of
agricultme has been just one of the
success stories of our age.
Even cows have been mechanized
beyond Grandpa’s comprehension.
But the greatest strides have been
made in some of the more subtle
areas such as genetics in both
cattle and crops, pesticides,
chemicals and electronics. Most
purely mechanical devices are
now only slight improvements over
yesterday’s gadgets, but we’ve
only begun to use the really ad
vanced technology of the Space
age on the farm.
Will we be forced to keep up the
pace?
There is a lot of evidence that our
rapid adoption and use of the latest
in technology has brought
agriculture to the brink of disaster.
We have succeeded in eliminating
the need for millions of farm
workers. Most food and fiber is
now produced in such abundance
that markets are flooded and
prices on the knife edge of profit or
loss. And the only way to
salvations is to continue to produce
more ‘efficiently’. It almost seems
as though our ‘efficiency’ has
reached the limit of human en
durance. I sincerely hope not.
Young men and women are still
feeling the urgency of establishing
their place in the Sorry Scheme of
Things on the land. And they will,
given an even chance, take over
NEED
MORE ROOM?
p-dj JOti) , x Read The
Classified
<•«' you c-ovi yuoy,. ovca/ Real Estate Ads
from their tired elders and con
tinue the race to out-produce their
neighbors and the whole world.
And they will make it pay, and we
will continue to eat. Because, as
Omar Khayyam in the Rubayyat
predicted, they will “-dash it all to
pieces, then, Remould it nearer to
the Heart’s Desire-”
So, if I may also make a
prediction, we have only begun to
scratch the surface of advanced
agriculture. The most exciting
times are just ahead, and I envy
the youth that will have a hand in
making it happen.
And the pace that will be
required will not be too hard to
endure, because there is still a
tempering presence right here in
our midst that still holds on to
many of the time honored virtues
of humility, honesty, and hard
work. These team farmers know
how to combine the Old with the
New and make it work. That
plowman behind the six-horse
team probably has a computer in
the house!
He certainly has one or more
diesel engines that power a series
of acceptable devices that can
make life a little easier. Those
hydraulic lines can go anywhere
and run anything. So can the
compressed air lines, which have
the advantage of service from
pressurized storage useable at any
time without starting the diesel
engine. Not as handy as electricity,
but acceptable. And the horse is
still fueled by hay, the best source
of renewable energy on the farm!
Besides which, it still remains a
symbol of strength and stability on
the farm scene.
Never have so few farm laborers
produced so much food. The
pressures will always remain on
those few, but the rewards will also
be there for those who can get it all
together. Getting it together will
mean using the latest in
technology, and also keeping in
touch with some traditional values.
Farmers must retain the Spiritual
values which make us human.
Then the fast pace of progress can
be kept up and endured.
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